- Kings prospect Jack Sparkes has changed college commitments. Brad Elliott Schlossman of the Grand Forks Herald reports (Twitter link) that the blueliner will now attend Clarkson after originally being committed to Michigan State. The 20-year-old was the tallest player in his draft class at six-foot-eight, going 180th overall. Sparkes split last season between USHL Muskegon and BCHL Chilliwack, picking up a dozen points in 44 games.
Kings Rumors
Los Angeles Kings Extend Quinton Byfield
According to a team announcement, the Los Angeles Kings have signed forward Quinton Byfield to a five-year, $31.25MM contract. The deal will pay the former second-overall pick of the 2020 NHL Draft an AAV of $6.25MM and will end after the 2028-29 NHL season.
Shortly after the Kings announced the signing, PuckPedia reported the breakdown of his contract:
2024-25: $775K salary with $5.5MM signing bonus
2025-26: $4MM salary with $3MM signing bonus
2026-27: $4MM salary with $1.5MM signing bonus
2027-28: $6.25MM salary
2028-29: $6.25MM salary (10-team M-NTC clause)
The deal comes as a mid-term agreement between Byfield and the Kings organization which likely gave both sides a little of what they wanted. The Kings will buy up the rest of Byfield’s RFA eligibility and one year of unrestricted free agency at a reasonable price tag while Byfield has set himself up for a long-term agreement heading into his age-27 season.
The first three years of Byfield’s career did not go as planned as the young forward scored eight goals and 33 points in 99 games. Despite the modest production on the scoresheet, Byfield showed an ability to be a physical player at a young age, maturity in the dot with a faceoff percentage of 45.0%, and above-average production in terms of defensive and possession metrics. One of the biggest counterarguments to Byfield’s lack of scoring during the early stages of his career centered around his usage by Los Angeles as he only averaged 13:21 of time per game.
Finally averaging more than 15 minutes a night and thrust into a role in the team’s top six — Byfield had a breakout campaign this past season. The young forward scored 20 goals and 55 points in 80 games while primarily playing next to Anze Kopitar and Adrian Kempe. Playing well in the Kings’ defensively sound system, Byfield also achieved a CorsiFor% of 59.4% during the 2023-24 season as well as a 93.2% on-ice save percentage in all situations.
With Kopitar potentially entering the last two years of his career, Byfield may begin to challenge for a center position. Nevertheless, Byfield should continue to be a factor in the team’s top six and will likely continue on the team’s top line. After securing the first 20-goal campaign of his young career — Byfield could become a 30-goal player rather quickly on this new contract.
Los Angeles Kings Sign Caleb Jones
The Los Angeles Kings brought some depth to their defensive core announcing a one-year, two-way contract with defenseman Caleb Jones. It will mark the second year in a row that Jones will have to settle for a league minimum contract on the open market.
Jones originally signed a one-year contract with the Carolina Hurricanes last offseason but couldn’t find any playing time on a deep Hurricanes blue line. Carolina traded Jones to the Colorado Avalanche in exchange for Callahan Burke exactly two months after signing the depth defenseman. He would go on to split the year between the Avalanche and their AHL affiliate, the Colorado Eagles.
During his time in the American Hockey League, Jones managed six assists for the Eagles over 12 games and produced a -2 rating. He was recalled on three separate occasions to the Avalanche on an emergency loan and would end up playing 25 games where he tallied five helpers. Still, Jones was rarely used by Colorado during his time on the NHL roster as he only averaged 12:12 of ice time per night. Nevertheless, the team still opted to use him when they could, and Jones was able to suit up in three postseason games for the Avalanche for the first time since the 2019-20 Stanley Cup playoffs.
It will be interesting to see where Jones fits into the lineup for Los Angeles as the team already has eight defensemen signed to NHL contracts without factoring in the next deal for Jordan Spence. In all likelihood, Jones will start the year with the Kings’ AHL affiliate in Ontario, CA unless there is an injury to the blue line during training camp.
Minor Free Agent Signings: Pacific Division
With over 180 deals signed during the first day of free agency yesterday, some smaller names may have gotten lost in the shuffle. Here’s a list of names that have inked two-way deals with Pacific Division clubs since the market opened yesterday, per CapFriendly. Some of these may have been included in our main coverage yesterday, while others went under the radar. All contracts carry the league-minimum $775K cap hit unless stated otherwise). Those listed here are likely to begin 2024-25 with each team’s AHL affiliate.
Anaheim Ducks
none
Calgary Flames
G Devin Cooley (two years)
F Martin Frk (one year)
Edmonton Oilers
D Connor Carrick (one year)
G Collin Delia (one year)
F James Hamblin (two years)
D Noel Hoefenmayer (one year)
F Noah Philp (one year)
Los Angeles Kings
F Glenn Gawdin (two years)
F Tyler Madden (one year)
F Jack Studnicka (one year)
D Reilly Walsh (one year)
San Jose Sharks
D Lucas Carlsson (two years, $800K cap hit)
D Jimmy Schuldt (one year)
Seattle Kraken
F Brandon Biro (one year)
D Nikolas Brouillard (one year)
D Maxime Lajoie (one year)
F Mitchell Stephens (two years)
Vancouver Canucks
G Jiří Patera (one year)
F Nathan Smith (one year)
Vegas Golden Knights
F Zach Aston-Reese (one year)
Kings Sign Warren Foegele, Re-Sign Copley, Lewis; Sign Five Others
David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period reports the Los Angeles Kings have agreed to a contract with free agent forward Warren Foegele. It’s a three-year deal in the $3.5MM AAV range, reports TSN’s Darren Dreger. They’re also bringing back depth goalie Pheonix Copley and fourth-line forward Trevor Lewis, per Dennis Bernstein of The Fourth Period. The team also announced the signings of forward Jeff Malott (one-way in 2024-25, two-way in 2025-26) and Glenn Gawdin on two-year contracts plus centers Tyler Madden and Jack Studnicka along with defenseman Reilly Walsh on one-year, two-way agreements.
Foegele is the headline addition out of the group. He’s coming off a career year with Edmonton, one that saw him post 20 goals and 21 assists in 82 regular season games despite averaging less than 14 minutes a night of ice time. However, he wasn’t quite as productive in the playoffs, being held to three goals and five assists in 22 contests.
Still, it’s a nice raise for the 28-year-old who recently wrapped up a three-year deal that carried a cap hit of $2.75MM. He’ll likely take the place of Viktor Arvidsson on Los Angeles’ roster; coincidentally, Arvidsson signed a two-year agreement with the Oilers today to replace Foegele. His role will likely be the same with the Kings, splitting time between the second and third lines.
As for Copley, he received a one-year, $825K agreement. The 32-year-old North Pole native was a feel-good story in 2022-23, coming up from the AHL to eventually post a 2.64 GAA with a .903 SV% in 37 games, earning him a one-year, $1.5MM deal for last season. However, Copley struggled in his eight appearances before tearing his ACL, ending his campaign in December. He’ll have a chance to battle David Rittich for the backup job with the other netminder heading for AHL Ontario.
Lewis, meanwhile, signed for $800K, a small raise after making the league minimum. The 37-year-old played in all 82 games last season, picking up eight goals and eight assists on the fourth line while playing a regular role on the penalty kill. He’s likely to reprise that role for 2024-25 which will be his 17th NHL campaign.
Malott has been a productive AHL scorer for the last three seasons, helping him secure a one-way year on this contract. He played exclusively with AHL Manitoba in 2023-24, notching 22 goals and 30 assists; it was the third straight campaign of 20-plus goals at that level. Despite that, he has just one career game of NHL experience. Even with the change in organization, the 27-year-old will likely have to start with the Reign and try to earn a recall from there.
Gawdin has a bit more NHL experience, seeing action in each of the last four years, spanning 13 games in total. He’s coming off a career year with AHL San Diego, one that saw him notch 22 goals and 33 assists in 70 games. The 27-year-old will be counted on to play a prominent role with the Reign next season.
Madden, meanwhile, is someone more familiar with the organization having spent the last four seasons with them, all with the Reign. He was non-tendered on Sunday to avoid giving him arbitration rights but quickly struck an agreement to return. The 24-year-old had 15 goals and 19 assists last season and should remain a regular in Ontario’s lineup.
Studnicka is the most experienced of their AHL-bound signings. He played in 22 NHL games last season but was limited to just one goal, eventually resulting in his clearing waivers. He was more productive in the minors, collecting 21 points in 36 games between AHL Abbotsford and San Jose. The 25-year-old has 107 career NHL games under his belt where he has six goals and ten assists.
As for Walsh, he has been a productive defenseman at the AHL level with a pair of 40-plus-point showings. Last season, he played in Boston’s system with Providence, collecting nine goals and 18 assists in 60 games. The 25-year-old became a Group Six free agent and should play a big role on Ontario’s back end next season.
Kings Sign Joel Edmundson To Four-Year Contract
Frank Seravalli of Daily Faceoff reports the Los Angeles Kings are close to signing free agent defenseman Joel Edmundson to a four-year, $15.2MM contract. The deal has been made official, per CapFriendly, moving Edmundson to the West Coast and completing the feat of playing in all four divisions.
Edmundson was a popular defender at the 2024 Trade Deadline, with his rights ultimately being moved from the Washington Capitals to the Toronto Maple Leafs, though Edmundson would play in just nine regular season games with the Leafs while nursing an undisclosed injury. He also appeared in seven postseason games, recording one assist – his lone point in 16 games with Toronto.
Amidst a turnover of their defense, and perhaps anticipating their big additions in free agency, Toronto opted to leave Edmundson unsigned, putting him back in a market excited about his hefty frame and long reach. The Kings were one of many teams tied to the defender, alongside Boston, Utah, and his original club of St. Louis, shares TSN’s Darren Dreger.
That competition may have sparked a July 1st bidding war, as Edmundson will walk away from free agency with a $350K raise from his last contract, despite posting just 32 points in 193 games over the course of the contract. He’ll look to support Los Angeles in the loss of Matt Roy, who’s held down a confident top-line role for the last three years. Top-pair minutes will likely go to Vladislav Gavrikov or Michael Anderson before they go to Edmundson, though the 31-year-old defender could be primed for a boost in ice time after middling through third-pairings over the last three seasons.
Kings Acquire Tanner Jeannot
The Los Angeles Kings have acquired forward Tanner Jeannot from the Tampa Bay Lightning, per Chris Johnston of The Athletic (Twitter link). In return, Tampa receives Pick 118 in this year’s draft and L.A.’s second-round pick in 2025, per Tracey Myers of NHL.com (Twitter link). The move has since been confirmed by the team.
This trade quickly succeeds Mikhail Sergachev’s move to the Utah Hockey Club. The two moves combine to free up $11.165MM in cap space, massively supporting Tampa’s pursuit of franchise centerman Steven Stamkos. It also quickly succeeds Tampa’s acquisition of Jeannot, which came ahead of the 2023 Trade Deadline, with the Lightning acquiring the winger for Callan Foote and one pick in each of the first, second, third, fourth, and fifth rounds.
Jeannot recorded 24 goals, 41 points, and 130 penalty minutes in his rookie 2021-22 season with the Nashville Predators. But he’s struggled to find that same spark since, totaling just eight goals and 18 points in 75 games with Tampa Bay between last season and this season. With the Lightning facing a cap crunch that may cost them the face of their franchise, they’ve been forced to accept defeat – winning back less than half of the assets they gave up for Jeannot.
But while the trade may illicit soul searching on Tampa’s end, it stands as a low-cost, high-upside move for the Kings. Jeannot carries a low-stakes $2.665MM cap hit – setting him up well to fill the girtty, high-energy bottom-six forward role left open by Carl Grundstrom’s trade to the San Jose Sharks. The Kings have used Grundstrom’s grit to good effect, and could be getting a more dynamic iteration in Jeannot, who shows much more drive down the ice and confidence on the puck. Los Angeles will be searching for any boost they can receive after a middling 2023-24 campaign, though the gritty style that’s led Quinton Byfield to success could also be exactly what Jeannot needs to rediscover his groove.
Canadiens, Kings Swap First Round Picks
The Montreal Canadiens have traded up to pick 21 in the 2024 NHL Draft, sending the Los Angeles Kings picks 26, 57, and 198 in return, per Dennis Bernstein of The Fourth Period (Twitter link).
Montreal, who also owns pick five, brings their two day-one selections just hours before they’ll take the podium. And they may not be done, per TSN’s Darren Dreger, who shares that the team is interested in finding another way into the Top 10, even if it means moving down from fifth overall (Twitter link). Dreger also mentions that Montreal is involved in player trade-talks as well, potentially opening the team up to an incredibly eventful day as they’re getting settled in to Vegas.
The 2022 NHL Draft marked the first time that Montreal has had two first-round picks since 2007 when they drafted Ryan McDonagh and Max Pacioretty. The team succeeded those picks with Juraj Slafkovsky and Filip Mesar in 2022 – and is now looking to make the most of the pair of picks in a strong 2024 first round. The class features talents at every spot, with players like Cole Eiserman and Berkly Catton bringing high skill to the wings, Michael Hage and Trevor Connelly standing as high-scoring centers, and Carter Yakemchuk and Anton Silayev potential fallers on defense. Even at five and 21, the Canadiens should have plenty of opportuntiy to bring in impactful lineup pieces.
Meanwhile, Los Angeles builds out their pool of future assets without losing too much stock on day one. It will be L.A.’s first time in the first round since 2021, when they selected Brandt Clarke eighth-overall. The Kings now have six picks in this year’s draft, more than they wielded in either 2021 or 2023, though three of their selections come in the sixth and seventh rounds. The Kings could afford some robust additions to their prospect pool, with little to look at besides Clarke and Jordan Spence. That should set the team up to take the best player available at each of their selections, regardless of positioning, as they look to find players who can quickly support their drive back to the postseason. At 25, they could be within reach of hardy forwards like Emil Hemming, Cole Beaudoin, and Jett Luchanko.
Kings, Sharks Swap Kyle Burroughs, Carl Grundström
The Kings have acquired right-shot defenseman Kyle Burroughs from the Sharks in exchange for the signing rights to RFA winger Carl Grundström, the team announced Thursday.
Burroughs, 28, is coming off a difficult year in which he played a role he was never meant for. After breaking into the league as a fringe bottom-pairing presence with the Canucks in 2021, he landed a three-year, $3.3MM commitment from San Jose on the open market last summer.
After the Sharks traded away reigning Norris Trophy winner Erik Karlsson to the Penguins later in the summer, it was clear there would be a domino effect on the rest of their defense corps. Many players were projected to be overtaxed while compensating for Karlsson’s loss on a team that was squarely and correctly projected to be a lottery contender. Perhaps no one was overworked more than Burroughs, who was thrust into top-four duties alongside Mario Ferraro.
At first glance, it went about as well as one would expect. Averaging north of 19 minutes per game, Burroughs managed two goals and six assists for eight points in 73 games while posting a -42 rating, worst in the league among defensemen. A more detailed look at his stats does yield some promising signs, though. His pairing with Ferraro controlled 48.1% of expected goals when deployed together, the best among any Sharks pairing with more than 100 minutes played this season. He also met expectations physically, leading the Sharks with 233 hits (fourth in the NHL) and placing second in blocks with 134.
But with younger righties Ty Emberson and Henry Thrun deserving of more minutes next season, alongside an expected UFA addition next week, Burroughs was on the cusp of being the odd man out on the San Jose blue line. While obviously not equipped for top-four minutes long-term, the 2013 seventh-round pick does carry signs that he can be effective in an everyday bottom-pairing role.
In Los Angeles, he’ll fight for a third-pairing role alongside Andreas Englund, who would immediately become one of the most fearsome, hardest-hitting duos in the league. Englund played much less than Burroughs on a nightly basis last season, averaging 13:13 per game, but still managed to finish inside the top 20 in hits league-wide. The Kings do have a pair of up-and-coming righties in Jordan Spence and 2021 eighth-overall pick Brandt Clarke, but both (especially the latter) are candidates to slide into second-pairing duties with Matt Roy likely heading elsewhere in free agency.
While parting with Burroughs, the Sharks pick up some checking forward depth in Grundström. The 26-year-old is now on his third NHL team after being drafted by the Maple Leafs in 2016 but being moved to the Kings before making his NHL debut three years later. They have three days to re-sign him or issue him a qualifying offer to retain his signing rights as an RFA this summer.
Injuries limited Grundström to 50 games last year, in which he scored eight goals and 12 points in fourth-line minutes (10:56 per game). The Swede has had decent possession metrics in SoCal and is also a frequent hitter with a good shot when he gets the chance. He’ll look to carry that solid energy play up north to the Bay, where he joins a bottom-six forward group that’s already seen two new names added this summer in Ty Dellandrea and Barclay Goodrow.
The Sharks can expect a new deal for Grundström to come in at around $1.5MM for a one-year term, Evolving Hockey projects. With over $30MM in projected cap space next season, though, the prospective $400K increase on Burroughs is nearly meaningless.
Burroughs remains under contract for two more seasons in Los Angeles. He can hit the UFA market again in 2026.
Kings Among Teams Expected To Show Interest In Jake Guentzel
Winger Jake Guentzel is set to be one of the top players in this year’s UFA class. The Hurricanes haven’t given up on trying to re-sign the veteran, per The Fourth Period’s David Pagnotta (Twitter link) who adds that the Kings and Red Wings are among the teams that are expected to show interest should the 29-year-old make it to the open market. Guentzel split the season between Pittsburgh and Carolina, who made him their big addition at the trade deadline. He’s coming off his third-straight 30-goal campaign and has averaged over a point per game in four of the last five years. Guentzel also had a good playoff showing, notching nine points in 11 contests, and is just below a point per game for his postseason career. That certainly has him well-positioned to earn a significant raise on the $6MM he has been making since 2019-20.